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EntertainmentHow to Survive in the Wilderness

How to Make a Fireplace for an Outdoor Shelter

Transcript

In order to make my fireplace, what I’m going to do is scrape away a lot of the leaves that are right here. Again, very, very wet, but once I get a fire going, it’ll dry all this out, really dry, and potentially light it. So we don’t want that to happen. We’re going to put a pretty good hearth down here.

If we were to build a round fire, like your typical s’more-roasting Boy Scout fire, it’d be great for people to sit around it, but if you were laying next to it, it would warm one spot. The way this is, we have a nice, long fire, right? We have this reflector in the background. The fire’s going to warm me from head to toe, reflect back off the wall. Behind us, we have all this. I’ve actually spent the night out with clothes like I’m wearing right now and a coat on a frozen river in about minus 30 degrees. And the way I did it was to built a system just exactly like what we’re doing right now. At minus 30, I could spend the night out with just the clothes I have on. I didn’t even have a rock reflector. I had to make a wooden reflector. With a long trench fire and a bed likes this covered with spruce, you could stay out minus 20, minus 30 degrees, and be fine all night.

So that’s kind of what we’re building here, even though it’s not going to be that cold tonight. We’re going to make a nice, long hearth for our fire. So what we’ve got here is a beautiful hearth. Were’s going to use it in one way tonight because it’s getting late. These rocks are going to serve two purposes. They’re going to stop the fire from burning down to the duff, and they’re also going to hold the heat. Say the fire dies during the middle of the night, you’re going to have all this rock heated up, and it’s going to hold that heat and keep you warm. Had we started this project in the morning, I would have built the fire on top of these rocks, let the rocks totally bake, and then put my bed on top of the rocks, so I’d have a heated rock pile to sleep on, which keeps you extra, extra warm at night.

We really don’t have enough time to heat all the rocks, because it is getting dark, so we’re going to put our fire on top of the rocks tomorrow night. If we want to keep our fire going all day, we can heat these rocks till they’re so warm that we won’t need a fire to sleep. So they have a double benefit. Really nice to have hot rocks.

On a cold, cold night, if you have a sleeping bag, you can take rocks from your fire, heat them up, wrap them in a shirt, stick them in the bottom of your sleeping bag, and your feet will be toasty all night. It’s really nice to have a nice pile of hot rocks.


Lessons in this Guide

First Aid Basics for Wilderness Survival

How to Tell Direction in the Wilderness Using a Watch

How to Make Wood Tongs for Rock Cooking

How to Build a Bed for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Purify Water for Rock Boiling

How to Deal with a Dangerous Animal

How to Adjust a Fish Snare

How to Send an Emergency Signal in the Wilderness

How to Survive in the Wilderness with Marko Yurachek

How to Send an Emergency Signal using a Reflective Surface

How to Find Worms for Your Fish Hook

How to Find a Ready-Made Shelter in the Wilderness

How to Attach a Fish Snare Trigger to a Tree

How to Make a Stone Tool

How to Forecast Weather in the Wilderness

How to Rock Boil Water Safely

How to Set Up a Cooking Fire in the Wilderness

How to Cook Using Rock-Boiled Water

What to Have in a Survival Kit

Hygiene Skills for the Outdoors

How to Cook Fish over a Campfire

How to Make a Hook for a Fish Snare

Survival Kit Essentials

How to Find a Good Spot for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Make a Fireplace for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Make Cordage (Rope) in the Wilderness

How to Make a Trigger for a Fish Snare

How to Gut a Fish with a Stone Tool

How to Build a Roof for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Build the Framework for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Make a Burn Bowl

How to Tell Direction in the Wilderness using Stick Shadows

How to Store Water in the Wilderness

How to Forage for Food in the Autumn

Where to Find Clean Water in the Wilderness

How to Store Food Outdoors in the Wilderness

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